2023
DOI: 10.1037/pspa0000358
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Generalized morality culturally evolves as an adaptive heuristic in large social networks.

Joshua Conrad Jackson,
Jamin Halberstadt,
Masanori Takezawa
et al.

Abstract: Why do people assume that a generous person should also be honest? Why do we even use words like “moral” and “immoral”? We explore these questions with a new model of how people perceive moral character. We propose that people vary in the extent to which they perceive moral character as “localized” (varying along many contextually embedded dimensions) versus “generalized” (varying along a single dimension from morally bad to morally good). This variation might be partly the product of cultural evolutionary ada… Show more

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